- Bitrefill accuses North Korea-linked Lazarus hacker group for compromising 18,500 purchase records
Source: CoinDesk
“Cryptocurrency payments and gift card platform Bitrefill has blamed the North Korea-linked hacking group Lazarus for a cyberattack on March 1, 2026, that compromised parts of its infrastructure and cryptocurrency wallets. The attackers gained access to production keys, transferred funds from hot wallets, and exposed 18,500 purchase records containing emails, payment addresses, and IP addresses. Approximately 1,000 records included encrypted usernames. Affected users were notified. Operations have resumed, with the company announcing to cover losses from operational capital. The incident underscores the importance of vigilance regarding crypto and on-chain security.” (03/18/26)
- US Home Loan Demand Drops 10.9% Following Four-Week Growth Streak
Source: Realtor.com
“Home loan applications decreased 10.9% for the week ending March 13, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association. The decrease comes after four consecutive weeks in which demand for mortgage applications was on the rise. The Market Composite Index, a measure of mortgage loan application volume, decreased 10.9% on a seasonally adjusted basis from one week earlier. On an unadjusted basis, the Index decreased 10% compared with the previous week.” (03/18/26)
https://www.realtor.com/news/trends/mortgage-applications-apply-for-loan-march-18-2026/
- US wholesale prices rose 0.7% in February, much more than expected and up 3.4% annually
Source: CNBC
“Wholesale prices rose sharply in February, providing another sign that inflation continues to percolate even aside from rising energy costs. The producer price index, a measure of pipeline costs that producers receive for their products, increased a seasonally adjusted 0.7% on the month, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Wednesday. Excluding volatile food and energy costs, the so-called core PPI increased 0.5%. Economists surveyed by Dow Jones had been looking for increases of 0.3% for both measures. For the all-items index, prices rose faster than the 0.5% pace in January. However, the core increase was less than the 0.8% for the prior month. On a 12-month basis, headline PPI inflation was at 3.4%, the most since February 2025, while core was at 3.9%, according to the BLS. The Federal Reserve targets inflation at 2%.” (03/18/26)
https://www.cnbc.com/2026/03/18/ppi-inflation-february-2026.html
- Pakistan: Regime to pause Afghan strikes for Eid at request of other Islamic regimes
Source: South China Morning Post [Hong Kong]
“Pakistan announced on Wednesday a pause in strikes against Afghanistan, saying the decision was made ahead of the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Fitr at the request of Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey. In a statement, Pakistan’s information minister Attaullah Tarar said the pause in strikes on ‘terrorists and their support infrastructure in Afghanistan’ would take effect at midnight on Wednesday and remain in place until midnight on Monday. ‘Pakistan offers this gesture in good faith and in keeping with the Islamic norms,’ he said. However, he said, ‘in case of any cross-border attack, drone attack or any terrorist incident inside Pakistan,’ the operations would immediately resume with renewed intensity.” (03/18/26)
- US judge orders Trump administration to reopen Voice of America
Source: BBC News [UK State Media]
“A judge in the US has ruled that the effective closure of the Voice of America (VOA) last year was ‘illegal’ and that hundreds of its journalists should be reinstated. District Court Judge Royce Lamberth has given authorities one week to put the international broadcaster back on air. The VOA was set up during World War Two to counter Nazi propaganda. Just weeks after returning to office as president, Donald Trump issued an executive order to close the broadcaster which his officials accused of left-wing bias.” (03/18/26)
- New Bill Would Crack Down on Prediction Markets After Suspicious Bets on Maduro, Iran
Source: Common Dreams
“Two Democratic lawmakers on Tuesday introduced legislation that would prohibit online prediction markets from allowing bets on government actions that could be easily gamed by insiders. The proposed Banning Event Trading on Sensitive Operations and Federal Functions (BETS OFF) Act, unveiled by US Sen. Chris Murphy (D-CT) and Rep. Greg Casar [D-TX], would ban ‘wagering on government actions, terrorism, war, assassination, and events where an individual knows or controls the outcome.’ The lawmakers said the legislation was necessary due to suspiciously timed bets that were placed on the cryptocurrency-based prediction platform Polymarket related to imminent US military actions in Venezuela and Iran, raising concerns that Trump administration officials were using insider information to profit from life-or-death policy decisions.” (03/18/26)
- Trump waives idiotic US shipping law for 60 days to steady oil market
Source: CNBC
“President Donald Trump issued a 60-day waiver of a longstanding U.S. shipping law in an attempt to stabilize oil markets amid the Iran war, the White House confirmed to CNBC on Wednesday. The temporary suspension of the Jones Act ‘will allow vital resources like oil, natural gas, fertilizer, and coal to flow freely to U.S. ports for sixty days,’ White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said in a statement. … The Jones Act, signed into law in 1920 by then-President Woodrow Wilson, requires that the transport of goods between U.S. ports must be conducted by U.S. vessels.” [editor’s note: He should just ask Congress to repeal the law, then sign the bill that does so – TLK] (03/18/26)
https://www.cnbc.com/2026/03/18/trump-jones-act-oil-iran-war.html
- The Iran War Is Not a Just War
Source: The Bulwark
by David Opderbeck“For all the impassioned impromptu defenses of the current war in Iran, there have been remarkably few that have used the traditional criteria Western (and many non-Western) theologians, ethicist, politicians, and soldiers have used to evaluate the righteousness of armed struggle, the ‘just war’ principles. Even those leaders who have called the war ‘just’ have not engaged with any of the specifics of just war reasoning. The paucity of such efforts likely results from the fact that this war cannot be considered a just war when all the relevant criteria are considered.” (03/18/26)
https://www.thebulwark.com/p/the-iran-war-is-not-a-just-war-theory-trump-hegseth-israel
- Politics tend to produce stupid opinions
Source: Eastern New Mexico News
by Kent McManigal“Everyone has opinions, usually on almost everything. Not all opinions are equally valid, though, and there are good reasons why this is true. It doesn’t bother me when people have opinions that differ from mine, as long as those opinions are based in reality and on facts. What bothers me is when people have different opinions based on superstition, lies, hallucinations, or some combination of all those. … This is common in what passes for political opinions, especially on the Internet.” (03/18/26)
- Seeing with Two I’s: States, Markets, and Some Advice for Us Liberals
Source: Liberalism.org
by Michael C Munger“Markets may fail; governments may help. But much about market activity will forever be invisible. A pair of unlikely thinkers helps illustrate the limits of what we know and the need for epistemic humility.” (03/18/26)
https://www.liberalism.org/p/seeing-with-two-i-s-states-markets-and-some-advice-for-us-liberals
- Iran war shows perils of America’s Mideast bases
Source: Responsible Statecraft
by Naman Karl-Thomas Habtom“U.S. military bases in the Middle East have served as a key launchpad for American attacks on Iran. But they’ve also served as a vulnerable target for retaliation. In less than two weeks, the Iranian military has fired thousands of missiles and drones at these bases, killing seven U.S. soldiers and wounding at least 140 more. So it is that America’s war of choice in Iran has exposed the dangers and futility of U.S. overseas bases. In order to minimize the risk of future wars and reduce the threat faced by allies and partners, the United States should learn from this war and begin shuttering these outposts.” (03/18/26)
- Support Your Local Collaborator
Source: Astral Codex Ten
by Scott Alexander“Every few weeks, a Trump administration official comes up with an insane plan that would devastate some American industry, region, or demographic. Maybe an Undersecretary of the Interior decides that aluminum is ‘woke’ and should be banned. … You’ve got to find someone who’s supported Trump until now, built up a reputation for loyalty, but this one time they finally snap and cash in some of their favors and agree to speak out. Sometimes it’s because they’re an aluminum magnate themselves and this would destroy their business. Other times they’re just a think tank guy or influencer who happens to be really knowledgeable on this one issue and willing to take a stand on it. By such people is the world preserved.” (03/18/26)
https://www.astralcodexten.com/p/support-your-local-collaborator
- Why AIPAC shouldn’t get too excited about its Illinois primary strategy
Source: Semafor
by David Weigel“Five years ago, when pro-Israel groups began spending to beat left-wing candidates, their raison d’etre didn’t really become an issue in their races. UDP and the Democratic Majority for Israel didn’t focus on the Jewish state in their advertising. Progressives, winning or losing to them, didn’t talk about it either. But nowadays, unconditional US aid to Israel is deeply unpopular with Democratic voters, who are more likely than ever to sympathize with Palestinians over the Jewish state. That’s an existential threat to AIPAC. Why hasn’t it translated clearly into more primary victories for critics of the Netanyahu government?” (03/18/26)
- The Federal Punishment of an Innocent Man, Part 2
Source: Future of Freedom Foundation
by Jacob G Hornberger“When I read what the feds did to secure the conviction of Ian Freeman for money-laundering, I was absolutely shocked. What they did perfectly exemplified the moral rot that exists within the federal criminal-justice system that operates within the statist box. Moreover, what is equally shocking to me is what appeared to me to be an utter lack of deep moral outrage by the federal judges in the case, both at the district-court level and the appellate-court level.” (03/18/26)
https://www.fff.org/explore-freedom/article/the-federal-punishment-of-an-innocent-man-part-2/
- The Constitution’s Sweeping Pardon Power Is Its Achilles’ Heel for Checking an Imperial President
Source: The UnPopulist
by Gabriel Schoenfeld“In our contemporary era, there have been a slew of controversies surrounding pardons, often issued by lame duck presidents. Gerald Ford’s pardon of Richard Nixon is the most famous of these, but there is also George H.W. Bush’s pardon of the Iran-Contra defendants, Bill Clinton’s pardon of the financier Marc Rich, and George W. Bush’s commutation of I. Lewis ‘Scooter’ Libby (subsequently granted a full pardon by Trump). Joe Biden does not escape scrutiny and judgment. … Is there anything that can be done to help us exit our pardon dystopia? As Trump’s second term proceeds, things are likely to get far worse.” (03/18/26)
https://www.theunpopulist.net/p/the-constitutions-sweeping-pardon
- US Marine Corps being destroyed from within
Source: Washington Times
by Gary Anderson“My first official act as the Marine Corps officer instructor at the Naval ROTC at Vanderbilt University in 1979 was to blow up a classroom. My predecessor had warned me that I would be teaching the evolution of warfare at the death hour (1 p.m.) after lunch, when the students were drowsy. He recommended an ‘attention getter.’ That day, I was lecturing on ancient Greek naval warfare and decided to use a cardboard scale model of a period warship to demonstrate the early use of fuel-air explosives. Frankly, chemistry had never been one of my strong points, and I apparently used more white gas in the mix than was needed. The resulting explosion blew the door open and set off the fire alarms.” [editor’s note: I had assumed the piece would be about the idiotic attempt to make the Corps no longer a complete self-contained force, but no, it’s another one of those “a noun, a verb, DEI” rants – TLK] (03/18/26)
https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2026/mar/17/us-marine-corps-destroyed-within/
- How “Real” Is the Iran War?
Source: Libertarian Institute
by Alan Mosley“Over the last week, the war between Iran, Israel, and the United States has played out in a second theater that never sleeps: the timeline of X/Twitter. The feed is saturated with claims about battlefield damage, casualty numbers, ‘secret’ losses, and the health or death of leaders. The problem is that much of the evidence people think they are judging is no longer anchored in reality. Independent researchers and reporters have documented a surge of AI-generated, mislabeled, and recycled ‘war footage’ circulating widely on X/Twitter, including fake missile strike visuals and staged-looking scenes of U.S. troops allegedly captured. In multiple cases, digital-forensics experts concluded that viral clips were likely AI-generated. Independent fact-checking is strained not only by volume, but by automation.” (03/18/26)
https://libertarianinstitute.org/articles/how-real-is-the-iran-war
- The nation’s accelerating self-assassination
Source: Washington Post
by George F Will“The Ides of March came and went with less drama than in 44 B.C., when Julius Caesar was assassinated. Nevertheless, 2,070 years on, there was a reason to beware mid-March this year. It marked another momentous, if mostly unremarked, moment in the nation’s accelerating self-assassination. The Peterson Foundation says that on or about March 18, the national debt will reach $39 trillion. This was less than five months after it reached $38 trillion. At our current pace of profligacy — it probably will accelerate — three trillion-dollar milestones can be passed during one fiscal year. … The debt has doubled in the 10 years since Donald Trump, on March 31, 2016, vowed to eliminate the debt in eight years. He did not try, but if he had, he would have been stymied by this grinding political dynamic: The fastest-growing age cohort is people 65 and older.” (03/18/26)
- There’s No Sheriff in Town: Can Congress Fix Health Care?
Source: Town Hall
by Jared Whitley“Health care has become so expensive in the US now that it has become a threat to public safety. At least that’s the message out of Okanogan County, Washington, where Sheriff Paul Budrow announced this month he’s stepping down because the elected position doesn’t come with health insurance for his family. … ‘As an elected official, the Sheriff’s position does not provide insurance benefits, and ensuring healthcare coverage and financial stability for my family became a responsibility I could not set aside.’ Health care affordability has become a national issue, with President Donald Trump having discussed it in his State of the Union address.” (03/18/26)
- The Populist International Is Falling Apart
Source: Foreign Policy
by Christian Caryl“Trump’s war in Iran is blowing up MAGA’s plans for an alliance with Europe’s far right.” (03/18/26)
- Reflections on Saturday Morning TV — and The Regulations That Ended It
Source: The Daily Economy
by Paul McDonnold“My childhood (metaphorically speaking) ended in the early 2000s, when traditional, kid-focused, Saturday morning broadcast television was fading away. Being in my thirties at the time, it was probably overdue. Even so, the misguided government regulations that helped end a rite of youth now form a case study in the futility that often results when bureaucrats wedge themselves between producers and consumers.” (03/18/26)
- The Remnant with Jonah Goldberg, 03/18/26
Source: The Dispatch
“Edmund Burke Was Not a Romantic | Interview: Yuval Levin.” (03/18/26)
https://thedispatch.com/podcast/remnant/edmund-burke-was-not-a-romantic-interview-yuval-levin/
- The Federal Spending Spree Will Make the Next Economic Shock Even Worse
Source: Reason
by JD Tuccille“You’re probably tired of hearing about the U.S. government’s looming debt crisis, because it’s a continuing backdrop to political conversations in this country. Unfortunately, the government’s debt problem comes up so often because most politicians do very little to address the issue. Year after year, they spend more than the government collects in revenue. A new report cautions that growing federal debt not only guarantees a day of reckoning but hobbles chances of fixing the situation.” (03/18/26)
- Ending the deceit that lures Africans into Russia’s war
Source: Christian Science Monitor
by staff“For most of the four-year war in Ukraine, Russia’s trading partners in Africa have maintained a studied silence on the issue. These nations rely on Russia for crucial imports – especially the oil that fuels their modernization and the wheat that feeds their burgeoning populations. But recently, civilians in several of these trade-dependent countries have pushed their governments to speak up about a much different, much murkier type of trade with Russia – the deceitful trafficking in humans who are forcibly thrown into the Russian battlefront in Ukraine. Last month, families of Kenyan men allegedly duped into fighting for Russia held protests in Nairobi, as the government revealed that more than 1,000 citizens had been so recruited. ‘These are … matters of human rights, national responsibility, and continental dignity,’ declared the Centre for Investigative Journalism in Zambia.” (03/17/26)
- A Knack for Synthesis
Source: Law & Liberty
by James E Hartley“Beyond his ability to ‘notice,’ Adam Smith was able to bring the different pieces together into a cohesive picture of reality.” (03/18/26)
- Mandatory Conscription Makes War Easier, Not Harder to Fight
Source: CounterPunch
by Ron Jacobs“An aspect of the argument that a draft would make politicians think twice before allowing a war to take place because politicians’ children might get drafted into the war is not really much of an argument when considered historically. Looking at the last war where US citizens were drafted — the war in Vietnam, it is more than apparent that those draftees who did most of the killing and dying in that war were working class men. If those men were black, they were even more likely to end up as nothing but cannon fodder. … Another part of this same argument is that the US people would be more likely to oppose US involvement in a war if their children were involved. Once again, history tells us something different.” (03/18/26)
https://www.counterpunch.org/2026/03/18/mandatory-conscription-makes-war-easier-not-harder-to-fight/
- Donald Trump, Petropresident
Source: Paul Krugman
by Paul Krugman“Why did Donald Trump attack Iran? Did he believe that a quick victory would boost his poll ratings? Was he looking for a way to change the subject from the Epstein files and affordability? Was he seduced into war by the Israeli government? The answer, surely, is all of the above. Bad decisions don’t have to have a single explanation. In fact, debacles on the scale of what we’re now experiencing usually have multiple causes. But when I look into the larger picture of Trump administration policy — not just the attack on Iran but domestic policies, especially the administration’s seemingly irrational hatred of renewable energy and its determination to keep America burning fossil fuels no matter what — I keep coming back to the huge influence now being wielded by oil money.” (03/18/26)
https://paulkrugman.substack.com/p/donald-trump-petropresident
- Yes, MAGA’s Fracturing Over Iran
Source: The American Conservative
by Andrew Day“I AM THAT I AM. Thus spake God to Moses, instructing him to ‘say unto the children of Israel, I AM hath sent me unto you.’ President Donald Trump has been saying something similar lately: I AM MAGA! Trump’s latest declaration of his MAGA-ness came in a long post on Truth Social defending the Israel-first blowhard Mark Levin, who has gotten into recent spats on social media with conservatives who criticize the war with Iran. … Many Trump voters have been surprised to learn that ‘MAGA is about’ war on Iran. To be sure, Trump hasn’t always been rhetorically consistent on matters of war and peace, but in 2016 he distinguished himself in the Republican primary by lambasting the Forever Wars, in particular the one in Iraq. And in the 2020 and 2024 elections he bragged about not starting any new wars in his first term.” (03/18/26)
https://www.theamericanconservative.com/yes-magas-fracturing-over-iran/
- Brendan Carr’s Crusade To Reshape TV Journalism Is Blatantly Unconstitutional
Source: Reason
by Jacob Sullum“The First Amendment does not allow the FCC chairman to police news coverage.” (03/18/26)
- Immigration questions for Markwayne Mullin
Source: The Watch
by Radley Balko“Stephen Miller has reportedly set a quota that federal immigration officers deport 3,000 people per day. Do you think arrest/deportation quotas are good policy? Miller’s reported ultimate goal is to deport more than a million people per year. No country has ever forcibly displaced that many people without mass casualties, particularly in such a short period of time. Do you think this is a realistic goal? Do you think the U.S. currently has the infrastructure to deport that many people humanely? Does it matter if it’s done humanely? DHS has routinely denied members of Congress access to immigration detention facilities despite a federal law that authorizes members to enter and inspect any facility unannounced. Will you enforce that law, or will DHS continue to ignore it under your watch?” (03/18/26)
https://radleybalko.substack.com/p/immigration-questions-for-markwayne
- Senate GOP should take Fetterman’s deal on voter ID
Source: Fox News
by David Marcus“Over the next several days, perhaps even stretching into next week, the United States Senate, that grave and august deliberative body, will performatively waste time with impassioned speeches over the SAVE America Act, which they all know will never pass. There may, however, be an off ramp to this Mobius loop of legislative futility: A proposal from Sen. John Fetterman [D-PA] would have the upper body vote on a clean, simple, voter ID bill, without provisions regarding mail-in ballots or citizenship. Make no mistake, President Donald Trump is correct that all the provisions of the SAVE America Act, including one banning men from women’s sports have broad popular support, and are of vital importance. But if the bill cannot pass, then so what?” (03/18/26)
https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/david-marcus-senate-gop-should-take-fettermans-deal-voter-id
- Must Liberalism be Atomistic?
Source: Isonomia Quarterly
by Jacob Rodriguez“During his inauguration ceremony, the newly elected mayor of New York City Zohran Mamdani pledged to run the city as he had run his campaign, as a committed socialist. He stirred much discussion during his speech when he claimed that ‘We will replace the frigidity of rugged individualism with the warmth of collectivism.’ A variety of public thinkers and politicians commented on this statement, taking it as a moment to reflect on what they perceived as a referendum on uniquely American ideals.” (03/18/26)
https://isonomiamag.substack.com/p/must-liberalism-be-atomistic
- Obscenely Unacceptable
Source: Common Sense
by Paul Jacob“‘F*ck this sh*t.’ That’s how the erudite opponents of Michigan’s Citizen Only Voting Amendment responded to supporters submitting a petition with more than 750,000 voter signatures to place the measure on the November ballot. Sans the asterisks, actually, which I supplied. Back in 2022, these oppositionists, fraudulently calling themselves Voters Not Politicians (VNP), helped politicians weaken Michigan’s voter-enacted term limits. Now they’re fighting an initiative that I’m promoting, which would: (1) clarify that only U.S. citizens are eligible voters at the state and local level, (2) mandate that the Secretary of State check the voter rolls to ensure it contains only citizens, and (3) require photo ID to vote.” (03/18/26)
https://thisiscommonsense.org/2026/03/18/obscenely-unacceptable/
- Wealth of Nations, Book 2: Prudence, Competition, and Party Walls
Source: EconLog
by Maria Pia Paganelli“Smith attributes the remarkable economic growth that Scotland experienced in the 18th century to the development of a vigorous banking system, made prudent through competition. In the 18th century, banks are a bit controversial. Some believe that banks, by introducing paper money, increase the quantity of money in a country, thus making it richer. Others claim that banks make a country poorer instead, because paper money substitutes for gold and silver as a means of domestic payment, thus decreasing the quantity of gold and silver, thereby decreasing the country’s wealth. Smith differs. For Smith, banks do help an economy to grow richer (not poorer) by decreasing (not increasing) the quantity of gold and silver in the country! Smith’s logic relies on economic forces and government regulations to generate the prudent financial conduct needed for stable growth.” (03/18/26)
- No, We Cannot “Afford” This War with Iran Either
Source: Ludwig von Mises Institute
by Connor O’Keeffe“It is an almost constant frustration for Democratic members of Congress, their ideological supporters, and the American left more broadly that — whenever they propose a new social program or demand-side subsidy — Republicans immediately push back that the program is unworkable because the federal government is drowning in debt and teetering on the edge of bankruptcy. And yet, after Republicans launched this extremely expensive war, nearly all the same politicians who had been preaching fiscal restraint have now rallied behind an operation that has already cost billions of dollars in the first few days alone. Democrats have been quick to point out this hypocrisy. … However, the left-wingers leading this charge right now are wrong to imply that the GOP’s hypocrisy is actually evidence that there is plenty to spend on all these government programs. There isn’t.” (03/18/26)
https://mises.org/mises-wire/no-we-cannot-afford-war-iran-either
- The Political Orphanage, 03/18/26
Source: The Political Orphanage
“Richer Than Ever, Miserable Anyway.” (03/18/26)
https://politicalorphanage.libsyn.com/richer-than-ever-miserable-anyway
- Reason Interview: Stewart Brand
Source: Reason
“Why Civilization Needs Better Manuals.” (03/18/26)
https://reason.com/podcast/2026/03/18/why-civilization-needs-better-manuals/
- Rising, 03/18/26
Source: The Hill
“Robby Soave delivers his radar on the resignation of Joe Kent, a senior counterterrorism official in the Trump administration, who stepped down citing his disapproval of America’s military escalation with Iran.” (03/18/26)
https://thehill.com/hilltv/rising/5782453-rising-march-18-2026/
- The Opinions, 03/18/26
Source: New York Times
“Michelle Goldberg on the Right’s Growing Antisemitism Problem.” (03/18/26)
- Reasonably Optimistic, 03/18/26
Source: Washington Post
“Until recently, universities were widely seen as places for asking questions, debating ideas and accessing upward mobility. Now, they’re just as likely to be seen as battlegrounds in the culture wars. As public trust eroded and political scrutiny intensified, a bigger question emerged: When did this shift happen? And more importantly, can it be repaired? Host Megan McArdle is joined by Daniel Diermeier, chancellor of Vanderbilt University. He is trying to answer those questions not just in theory but in practice.” (03/18/26)
- The Daily Blast With Greg Sargent, 03/18/26
Source: The New Republic
“Trump Case for War Undermined by Fresh Bombshell as MAGA Cracks Up.” (03/18/26)
https://newrepublic.com/article/207889/trump-case-war-undermined-fresh-bombshell-maga-cracks
- Ron Paul Liberty Report, 03/18/26
Source: Ron Paul Liberty Report
“Trump vs. NATO — Would He Actually Leave?” (03/18/26)
- Politico Playbook Audio Briefings, 03/18/26
- The Good Fight, 03/18/26
Source: Yascha Mounk
“Ibram X. Kendi on Great Replacement Theory.” (03/18/26)
- The Headlines, 03/18/26
Source: New York Times
“Israel’s ‘Decapitation’ Strategy, and the Trump Official Who Resigned Over the War.” (03/18/26)
- Bulwark Takes, 03/18/26
Source: The Bulwark
“Why Does Gen Z Hate Israel Now?” (03/18/26)